lace

You are currently browsing articles tagged lace.

I began Free Pattern Friday as a way to share all the vintage patterns I love with everyone else who might not have access to them. Quite often originals can be hard to find, especially pre-1940s (with some exceptions, including Iva Rose Reproductions). I also believe strongly that sharing information and getting others interested in it is what keeps it alive. Without a person actively digging into a subject deeply with glee, many facts, skills, arts, and works are lost to time. So imagine my joy at finding the National Library of Australia had scanned numerous newspapers and periodicals from the 1800s-1940s, and even greater joy at realizing their interface allowed for easy searching, public tagging, and public text correction.

A number of these publications contained ‘Women’s Supplements’, separate sections of the paper filled with all sorts of patterns and gossip on the latest stars and scandals, presumably because looking at national news might hurt womens’ heads. Still, there is a treasure to be dug out of these pages! Ravelry person shabbyknits found these beauties:

Knitted in Eyelet Fashion

New Pouched Jumper

…and I only searched ‘knitting’ and came up with these wonderful patterns amongst many, many others (click for the pattern):

Knit This In One Piece

For Your Holidays

Ski-ing Days: Where Hearts Are Trump

Ideal For The Summer Cruise

They’re out there! I didn’t even look for crocheted stuff! Oh, did I mention they have a one-click option to save as a PDF or image file? Your choice, at whatever zoom level you want (admittedly it gets a bit fiddly, breaking up into strange pieces sometimes, but thems the breaks). I ask that anyone reading this who has an interest in vintage patterns hops over there ASAP and starts searching, tagging, and correcting where possible, and if you’re on Ravelry, add them to the database! Even if you just add a link and the title, one of the obsessives (such as myself) will come along and add the rest of the information, and so another pattern will be shared with the world.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Here’s a garment so vintage I had to look up what it was before posting; a pelise was a mantle worn over an outfit for additional warmth and decor. Though usually floor-length, this appears to be a shorter pelise, which came into fashion for a bit in certain parts of Europe. Its modern descendants include the overcoat and the dressing gown. Also whatever you call that thing you wear at night over your nightgown; I can’t recall the name at the moment.

Rather oddly it suggests this pattern would be great for a baby on the left side, but a quick assessment of the measurements indicate it’s a 32″ bust- a little on the small side for the fully-dressed modern woman, but certainly too big for most toddlers. If you’d like to create this in a larger size it would be easiest to up the gauge from the wee 7.5 sts per inch to something more reasonable like 6.5.

Click on through for the rest of the pattern!

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

In recently organizing the vast piles of vintage patterns I acquired (a taste of the scale- I purchased one of those 100-packs of plastic sleeves to hold the books and already ran out with a stack left unorganized), I came across some more photocopies from the depths of the New York Public Library. Unfortunately I did not copy the book cover or any sort of identifying information, but I recall it was one of the books bound together with many others from the 1930′s, some sort of Home Knitting book with general advice and basic patterns to modify. Based on the mention of Knit-Cro-Sheen I’m suspecting it may be a J&P Coats publication.

The patterns below all encourage modification- the basic lace patterns are given first, followed by references to ‘charts’ for resizing the patterns to different sizes. Please read through carefully as these aren’t the clearest of patterns I’ve come across; on the plus side the needles are given in millimeters, making it much easier to decipher the scale and whatnot.

Click for the rest of the patterns!

Tags: , , , , , ,

I learned crochet before I really got the hang of knitting, and find it’s far easier to teach people to use a hook rather than two sticks with pointy ends. And yet, I do not consider myself a crocheter. The painful truth is I find the fabric created by most crochet patterns to be ugly, blocky, stiff and square where knitted fabric with its army of tiny chevrons drapes much more nicely and lends itself to a large variety of patterns.

Truly, this is unfair, as the fault lies not with the medium (for certainly there are many lovely free-form crochet pieces and knitting cannot match the three-dimensional shaping that crochet so nicely lends itself to). I believe the fault lies with the patterns. Indeed, many crocheted patterns seem to revel in crochet’s blockier, square aspects, seeking to whip up a garment from geometric shapes with no sense of the human form underneath. I find a happy medium in the daintier femininity of 30′s patterns, which utilize crochet to, yes, form the geometric shapes popular with the Deco style, but also have a flair of girliness so often neglected in crochet patterns until very recently.

And with that, I share…The Enfield!

Note how the linear quality of the basic crochet stitch has been harnessed to enhance the military effect of the epaulets and center decoration. Further instructions are below the cut.

Enjoy!

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Newer entries »